unattempted 
2. Not subjected to a trial or tent; not tried, as 
by temptation. [Hare.] 
But for my hand, as unattempttd yet, 
Ukea poor beggar, rallvth on tl-ii< h. 
Shall., K. Jiilin,ll. 1. 591. 
unattended (un-a-ten'ded), n. 1. Not attc n,l 
ed; not accompanied ; having no retinue or at- 
6581 
I am not unaware how the production! of the Ornb- 
itreet brotherhood have of late years fallen under many 
prejudices. Swift, Tale of a Tub, Int. 
Dead-asleep, unaware as * corpse. 
Brmming, Ring and Book, vl. 135. 
Answers nothing, save with her brown eyes, 
.Smiles unaware, as It a guardian saint 
.Smiled In her. 
Mrt. Drowning, Aurora Leigh, T. 
without a guardian. Milton, P. L., unawares (un-a-warz'), adr. [< unaware + 
viii. til). 2. Not attended to; notdressed: as, 
inititti'iidrd wounds. 
unattending (un-a-ten'ding), a. Not attend- 
ing or listening ; not attentive. Milton, Comus, 
1. 272. 
unattentive (un-a-ten'tiv), a. Inattentive; 
carolcss. Clarke, Evidences, v. 
unattested (un-a-tes'ted), a. Not attested; 
having no attestation. 
Thus God has not left himself unattested, doing good, 
sending us from heaven rains and fruitful seasons. 
Barrow, On the Creed. 
unattire (un-a-tir'), i'.. [< w- 2 + attire.'] To 
take off the dress or attire, especially robes of 
state or ceremony ; undress. [Bare.] 
We both left Mrs. Schwellenberg to unattire. 
Mine. D'ArNay, Diary, v. 209. (Dane*.) 
unattractive (un-a-trak'tiv), a. Not attractive 
or pleasing, 
unattractiveness (un-a-trak'tiv-nes), n. The 
state of being unattractive, t'nrliiiiilitlif Rev., 
N. 8., XLIII. 7(54. 
unau (u'). " [8- Amer.] The South Ameri- 
can two-toed sloth, Cliolopus didactylim. 
cut under Cholopus. 
unaudienced (un-a'di-enst), a. Not admitted to 
an 
8on. [Bare.] 
unauspicious (un-as-pish'us), a. Inauspicious. 
Ingrate and unauipiciout altars. Shak., T. N., v. 1. 116. 
unauthentic (un-a-then'tik), a. Not authentic ; 
not genuine or true. T. ft'arton. 
unauthenticated (un-a-then'ti-ka-ted), a. Not 
authenticated ; not attested ; not shown to be 
genuine. Paley. 
unauthenticity (un-a-then-tis'i-ti), n. The 
character of being unauthentic. Atlienteiim, 
No. 3193, p. 15. 
unauthoritative (uu-4-thor'i-ta-tiv), a. Not 
Encyc. Brit., V.' ~ 
adv. gen. -ex.] 1. While the person is una- 
ware ; unexpectedly ; without previous know- 
ledge or preparation ; suddenly. 
Take the great-grown traitor unaware*. 
Shak., 3 Hen. VI., iv. 8. 63. 
There may be stupidity in a man of genius If you take 
him unaware* on the wrong subject. 
Oeorge Eliot, Middlemarch, I. 165. 
2. Without premeditated design ; inadver- 
tently. 
As when a ship, that flyes fayre under sayle, 
An hidden rocke escaped hath umcare*, 
That lay In walte her wrack for to bewalle. 
Spenter, F. Q., I. vi. 1. 
They (Pharisees] did not know themselves; they had 
unaicare* deceived themselves as well as the people. 
./. //. Xemnan, Parochial Sermons, L 127. 
At unawares (erroneously at unaware), unexpectedly. 
By his foe surprised at unawaret. 
Shak., 3 Hen. VI., Iv. 4. 9. 
I came to do It with a sort of love 
At foolish unaware. Mrt. Browniny. 
unawned (un-ftnd'), a. In hot., not provided 
with an awn. 
Sec unazotized (un-az'o-tizd), a. Not azptized; 
not supplied with azote or nitrogen. 
UlllOnCeU \ IUI-H m-eill },ti. i^ui numjti/r'dto ' *Oiaiiy, p. . 
Zli, nee; not received or heard. Richard- unbacked (un-bakt ') a 1. Not having been 
backed ; not taught to bear a rider; unbroken. 
Like unback'd colts they prlck'd their ears. 
Shalt., Tempest, Iv. 1. 176. 
2. Unsupported; left without aid; unaided; in 
sporting, not supported by bets: as, an unbacked 
horse. 3. Not moved back or backward. ('. 
(un-bag'), r. t. [< n- 2 + bag."] To let 
out of a bag; pour out of a bag; take from or 
as if from a bag: as, to unbag a fox; to unbntj 
grain. [Bare.] 
Mrs. Tulliver . . . unbagged the bell-rope tassels and 
unpinned the curtains. 
George Eliot, Mill on the Floss, iii. 3. 
.a. 
authoritative. Encye. ant., V. 7. 
unauthoritiedt.a, [Early mod -E. unautoritied; unbailable (un-ba'la- 
< n-l + authority -erf 2 .] Unauthorized. ^ offense is unbaifal 
Nor to do thus are we unoutorified either from the mor- unbaized (un-bazd'), a. 
all precept of Salomon to answer him thereafter that prides } lft ;~ i i ...... 1 
him in his Wily. Milton, On Def. of Humb. Remount, Pref. 
unauthorized (un-a'thor-izd), a. Not author- 
ized; not warranted by proper authority ; not unbaked (un-bakt'), a. 
duly commissioned. Shak., Othello, iv. 1. 2. mature . hl-digested. 
Also spelled unauthorised. 
unavailability (un-a-va-la-bil'i-ti), n. The 
character of being unavailable. 
unavailable (un-a-va'la-bl), a. 1. Not availa- 
ble ; not capable of being used with advantage : 
as, unavailable manuscripts. 2t. Useless; vain. 
unbattered 
the amount of rock-excavation turn out to I* very small 
and tin amount of earth-excavation very laik" 
unballast 1 (iin-lml'itst), r. t. [< MH-- -t- boBOft.] 
To free from ballast; discharge the ballast 
from. 
Unballast-t (un-bal'ast), a. [For unballasted.] 
Unballasted. Adilimn, tr. of Ovid's Meta- 
rnorph., ii. 
unballasted (un-baras-ted), n. Not hrnttehed 
with ballast; not kept steady by ballast or by 
weight; unsteady: literally or figuratively: as, 
iiiihulliixti'il wits. 
unbanded (un-ban'ded), a. Having no band, 
(specially in the sense of being stripped of a 
band, or lacking one where one is needed. 
Your bonnet unhanded. 
Shak., As you I.Ike It, Hi. 2. 398. 
unbank (un-bangk'), . t. [< i/- 2 + banl.-i.] 
1 . To take a bank from ; open as if by leveling 
or removing banks. [Bare.] 
Unbank the hours 
To that soft overflow which bids the heart 
Yield Increase of delight. 
Taylor, Edwin the Fair, I. 5. (Darnel.) 
2. To cause (a fire) to burn briskly by raking 
off the ashes from the top, opening drafts and 
the ash-pit door, etc. See to bank a fire, under 
bank*. Set. Amer., N. 8., LXII. 315. 
unbankable (un-bang'ka-bl), a. Not bankable. 
All the gold that France has paid, or can pay, were a 
poor exchange for the treasure of German Idealism, un- 
bankable as It la. 
B. L. GUdertleece, Essays and Studies, p. 56. 
Bentley, unbaptized (un-bap-tizd'), a. Not baptized; 
hence, figuratively, unhallowed; profane. 
For those my unbaptized rhimes, 
Writ in my wild unhallowed times, . . . 
Forgive me. God. 
Herrick, His Prayer for Absolution. 
inbar (un-bftr'), r. t. 1. To remove a bar or 
bars from : said especially of a gate or door. 
I7n*or the sacred gates, and seek the pow'r 
With ofler'd vows, In Illon's topmost tow'r. 
Pope, Iliad, vt 111. 
Then to the castle's lower ward 
Sped forty yeomen tall, 
The iron studded gates unbarred . . . 
And let the drawbridge fall. 
Scott, Uarmlon, I. 4. 
2. To open ; unlock : especially in figurative 
uses. 
Not bailable : as, 
Not covered with 
It slid down the polished slope of the varnished and un- 
baized desk. Charlotte Bronte, Vlllette, xxviii. 
Not baked ; hence, im- 
Your son was misled with a snipt taffeta fellow there, 
whose villanous saffron would have made all the unbolted 
and doughy youth of a nation in his colour. 
Shak., All's Well, Iv. 5. 3. 
Songs she may have, 
And read a little u*a*'d poetry, 
Such as the dabblers of our time contrive. 
But to complain or not complain alike Fletcher and another, Elder Brother, II. 2. 
is unavailable. A l>p. Potter, unbalance 1 (un-bal'ans), v. t. [< wn-1 + bal- 
Not availing or ance< .] To throw out of balance. 
unavailing (un-a-va'ling), o. 
having the effect desired ; ineffectual ; useless ; 
vain: as, unarailinq efforts; unarailing prayers. 
= 8yn. Fruitless, Ine/ectual, etc. Seeufe. 
unavailingly (un-a-va'ling-li), adr. Without 
avail. Fortnightly' Rev., N. S., XLI. 820. 
unavisedt, a. Unadvised. 
Wit unansed, sage folie. Rom. qfthe flow, 1. 4738. 
unavoidable (un-a-voi'da-bl), a. 1. Incapable dencler 
of being made null or void. 2. Not avoid- ca , e s. 
1 inevitable : as, una- . 
The sure physician, death, who Is the key 
To untar these locks. Shak., Cymbellne, v. 4. 8. 
Soon as Aurora had unliarr'd the Morn. 
Prior, Colin's Mistakes, II. 
unbarbed (un-barbd'), a. If. Not sheared, 
shaven, or mown; unshaven. 
Must I go show them my unbarbed sconce? 
Shak., for., iii. 2. 99. 
The thick unbarbed grounds. DrauU,n. 
2. Not furnished with barbs or reversed points, 
hairs, or plumes. 
unbarbered (un-bar'berd), a. Unshaven. 
We'd a hundred Jews to larboard 
Unwashed, uncombed, unbarbered. 
Thackeray, The White Squall. 
unbark't (un-bark'), r. /. [< w- 2 + bark 2 .] 
To strip off the bark from, as a tree; bark. 
Bacon, Nat. Hist.. $ 654. 
, . 
It |, true the repeal of these laws might restore harmony unbark 2 t (un-bark'), r. [< tin- 2 + fcorJ-3. Cf. 
disbark disembark 1 To disembark; land. Hak- 
, ., Vnuanna n 91 A 
'" ?f, n bati-kad') r t [< - 2 + 
$ ^ n ' ^.^ s " rne + 
^ (un-bar-Sa'dod), a. Not bar- 
rica( i e( j stopped, or blocked up ; unobstructed. 
Burke, To wl Elliot, Esq. 
Alien, and Neurol., VIII. S24. unbase (un-bas'), a. Not base, low, or mean; 
between the railroads, but only by a further unbalancing 
of the relations between the railroad companies and the 
public. Pop. Sri. Mo., XXXV. 388. 
unbalance 2 (un-bal'ans), n. [< n- 2 + balance, 
t'.] Want of balance ; derangement. [Bare.] 
ing Influence of disease In this class of cases 
unavoidableness (un-a-voi'da-bl-nes), i. The 
state or character of being unavoidable ; inevi- 
tableness. 
unavoidably (un-a-voi'da-bli), adv. Inevitably ; 
on account of some unavoidable thing or event, 
unavoided (un-a-voi'ded), a. 1. Not avoided 
or shunned. 2f. Unavoidable; inevitable. 
We see the very wreck that we must suffer ; 
And unavoided is the danger now. 
Shak., Rich. II., II. 1. 268. 
Una vowed (un-a-voud'), a. Not avowed or 
openly acknowledged: as, unavowed dislike, 
unaware ( un-a-war' ),. Not aware; not head- 
ing; heedless; unmindful: often used adver- 
bially. 
As one that unaware 
Hath dropp'd a precious jewel in the flood. 
Shak., Venus and Adonis, 1. 823. 
Will he, so wise, let loose at once his ire, 
Belike through impotence, or unairaref 
Hilton, P. L , ii. 1..U. 
' V M .rM^'irvt unbalanced (un-bal'anst), a. 1. Not balanced; notdegradii 
, March 18, 1655. Ilot poised . v Wnothesjy. 
Let earth, unbalanced, from her orbit fly, 
, 
phmcta and suns run lawless through the sky. 
r<W, Esy on Man, I. 266. 
. 
unbashedt (un-basht'), a. Not filled with or 
not feeling shame ; unabashed. 
Arcadia, iii. 
Sir P. Sidiie;/. 
Such were the fashionable outrages of unbalanced par- unbashful (un-bash'ful), a. Not bashful ; bold ; 
ties. J- Adamt, Works, IV. 287. j mpu dent ; shameless. Shak., As you Like it, 
2 Not brought to an equality of debt and ii. 3. 50. 
credit: as, an unbalanced account. 3. Un- unbated (un-ba'ted), a. It. Not bated; una- 
steady; easily swayed ; deranged; unsound. bated; undiminished. 
Thus good or bad to one extreme lietray 
Th' unbalanced mind. Pope, Imit. of Horace, 1. 6. 
My guards 
Are you, great Powers, and the unbated strengths 
Of a flrin conscience. B. Jonton, Catiline, III. 4. 
2. Unblunted : noting a sword without a but- 
ton on the point. 
The treacherous Instrument is in thy hand, 
Unbated and envenom'd. Shak., Hamlet, v. 2. S28. 
Unbalanced bid, in public contracts, a bid for the per- 
formance of n given work at specified rates for each of the 
various kinds of labor or materials required, which, by 
being made on an erroneous estimate of quantities of each, 
appears, assuming those quantities to be correct to be low 
irpo^rq^^^^ 
if the estimates are of a very large quantity of rock-exca- Drydeii. Cynion and Iphigema. 
vation and a very small quantity of earth-exi-avatwn^a^i|l un battered (un-bat'erd), O. Not battered; not 
for the entire work at a very low ra * or L i ^ ^ ^^ bruised or injured by blows. Shak., Macbeth, 
foweat bid but might prove to be the highest, should V. 7. 19. 
